Michael Bader

AssociateÌýProfessor, Johns Hopkins University

Department of Sociology

Michael Bader studies how cities and neighborhoods have evolved since the height of the Civil Rights Movement. His research focuses on how residents and businesses choose to locate in particular neighborhoods and how these choices lead to racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic inequalities in Americans' well-being. In particular, he examines the location, causes, and health consequences of urban food deserts, neighborhoods with low accessibility to affordable nutritious food. In addition, he is developing innovative tools to measure the quality of neighborhood environments through the use of Google Street View and advanced statistical techniques.Ìý

Michael R. Fisher Jr.

Assistant Professor, The Ohio State UniversityÌý

Department of African-American and African Studies

Michael R. Fisher Jr., Ph.D. is Assistant Professor in the political economy of race/racism in the Department of African American and African Studies at The Ohio State University. Trained as an interdisciplinary scholar, Dr. Fisher’s areas of specialization include race, public policy, and socio-economic inequality and housing and urban redevelopment. His current book project, Black Community Building: Public Housing Reform and the Promise of an Alternative Model to Mixed-Income NeighborhoodsÌý(under contract with Georgetown University Press),Ìýreorients the debate on public housing reform by arguing that mixed-income housing creation as market-driven urban policy must be abandoned given its disparate impact on Black communities living in high-poverty neighborhoods in U.S. cities. He currently serves as a founding steering committee member of the , a group dedicated to uplifting the Black-led struggle for land and housing in D.C.

Theodore Greene

Associate Professor, Bowdoin College

Department of Sociology

Greene's research, writing, and teaching interests lie at the intersections of gender, sexuality, urbanism, and culture. His research broadly uses sexual communities to understand how urban redevelopment shapes and reconfigures how individuals conceptualize, identify with, and participate in local communities. His latest bookÌý, draws on ethnographic, archival, and interview data collected from iconic gay neighborhoods in Washington, DC and Chicago to develop a framework for understanding how community actors legitimate claims of ownership to a neighborhood community in the absence of residential, network, and material ties (vicarious citizenship).

Bradley Hardy

Distinguished Professor at Georgetown University

McCourt School of Public Policy

BradleyÌýis a nonresident senior fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution, a research fellow with the Institute for Economic Equity at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, and a research affiliate of both the University of Wisconsin Institute for Research on Poverty and the University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research. His research examines trends and sources of income volatility and intergenerational mobility within the United States, with a focus on socio-economically disadvantaged families, neighborhoods, and regions. He also conducts research on the role of anti-poverty transfer programs such as SNAP food stamps, the earned income tax credit, and TANF for improving economic well-being among low income individuals and families.

Willow Lung-Amam

AssociateÌýProfessor, University of Maryland

Urban Studies and Planning Program

Willow Lung-Amam, Ph.D. is an AssociateÌýProfessor in the Urban Studies and Planning Program and Director of Community Development at the National Center for Smart Growth Research and Education at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her research focuses on the link between social inequality and the built environment. She is the author of Trespassers? Asian Americans and the Battle for Suburbia (University of California Press, 2017) and has written numerous articles on the topic of immigrant suburbanization, equitable development, gentrification, suburban poverty, and the geographies of opportunity. During the 2016-2017 academic year, she was a visiting Ford Fellow at the Metropolitan Policy Center.

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William T. Jackson

Assistant Professor, Florida State University

Askew School of Public Administration

Dr. William T. Jackson is an Assistant Professor in the Askew School of Public Administration and Policy at Florida State University’s College of Social Sciences and Public Policy, and a former Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Public Administration and Policy at º£½Ç»»ÆÞ’s School of Public Affairs. He earned his Ph.D. in Public Affairs from Florida International University. His research tests the explanatory power of various theories of public administration, such as political control of the bureaucracy, representative bureaucracy, intersectionality, and organizational socialization. Specifically, he is interested in whether these theories can help us understand disparities in public service delivery among social groups.

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Samir Meghelli

Senior Curator, Smithsonian Institution

Anacostia Community Museum

Dr. Samir Meghelli is a historian, writer, educator, and serves as Senior Curator at the Smithsonian Institution's Anacostia Community Museum in Washington, DC.ÌýDr. Meghelli received his B.A. (magna cum laude) from the University of Pennsylvania and his M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. in History from Columbia University. Prior to joining the Smithsonian Institution, he was a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, as well as a Visiting Scholar at Northeastern University (Boston, MA) and the Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris ("Sciences Po"; Paris, France). Dr. Meghelli is co-author of "The Global Cipha: Hip Hop Culture and Consciousness" (2006) (with James G. Spady and H. Samy Alim) andÌýco-editor of "New Perspectives on the History of Marcus Garvey, the U.N.I.A., and the African Diaspora" (2011).